New Lincoln letter added to archives

An original handwritten letter by President Abraham Lincoln is returned to its original bound volume at the National Archives in Washington on Thursday after being donated by Lawrence Cutler, a private collector from Scottsdale, Ariz.

? The National Archives on Thursday added to its collection a short letter written by President Abraham Lincoln to help an ousted U.S. Mint director who was the son-in-law of a Republican senator.

In the new letter, Lincoln asked his treasury secretary, Salmon Chase, to allow the fired head of the U.S. Mint in San Francisco, Robert Stevens, to review the charges that led to his removal. Lincoln had appointed Stevens as a favor to Oregon Sen. Edward Baker, the ousted director’s father-in-law.

“This letter, while seemingly routine, is an extremely important key to understanding President Lincoln’s relationship with Senator Baker,” said James Hastings, director of access programs at the archives. “It shows his interest, even in the midst of the Civil War, in political issues on the West Coast.”

The letter is written on yellowed stationery simply marked Executive Mansion, Washington, with a dashed line where the date — Nov. 14, 1863 — was filled in by hand. This was five days before Lincoln gave the Gettysburg Address.

The archives says it was torn years earlier from a bound volume of Chase’s correspondence with government officials. The removal occurred before the book of letters was inducted into the archives.

Specialists at the archives will reattach the letter to the place it was torn from the book.

“We will have this piece of the puzzle now where it belongs, and scholars can now interpret its importance to this critical period,” Hastings said.

The letter was donated to the National Archives by Lawrence Cutler, a private collector from Scottsdale, Ariz.